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Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein sites a non-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext. He's right: we haven't advanced markedly in 'getting it' since 1988. The hypertext use-case on page 623 illustrates how a young writer got it and used it.

Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein cites a now-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext, noting that we really haven't made much, if any, advance in understanding since then. Page 623 of the essay neatly captures a simple, but profound, use-case of spatial hypertext by a young student writer.

Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein cites a now-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext, noting that we really haven't made much, if any, advance in understanding since then. Page 623 of the essay neatly captures a simple, but profound, use-case of spatial hypertext by a young student writer.

Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein cites a now-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext, noting that we really haven't made much, if any, advance in understanding since then. Page 623 of the essay neatly captures a simple, but profound, use-case of spatial hypertext by a young student writer.

Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein cites a now-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext, noting that we really haven't made much, if any, advance in understanding since then. Page 623 of the essay neatly captures a simple, but profound, use-case of spatial hypertext by a young student writer.

Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein cites a now-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext, noting that we really haven't made much, if any, advance in understanding since then. Page 623 of the essay neatly captures a simple, but profound, use-case of spatial hypertext by a young student writer.

Twenty years ... and counting Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Mark Bernstein cites a now-ancient essay on the then-future of hypertext, noting that we really haven't made much, if any, advance in understanding since then. Page 623 of the essay neatly captures a simple, but profound, use-case of spatial hypertext by a young student writer.

 

Last update: Monday, July 19, 2010 at 7:38 PM GMT.

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